Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
YUVRAJ DIGVIJAY SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
YUVRANI PRATAP KUMARI
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
02/05/1969
BENCH:
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
BENCH:
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1970 AIR 137 1970 SCR (1) 559
1969 SCC (2) 279
ACT:
Hindu Marriage Act 1955 (Act 25 of 1955), s. 12-Conditions
for divorce on grounds of impotence, invincible repugnance
to sexual act and inability to consummate marriage though
neither party proved impotent.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant married the respondent according to Hindu
rites on April 20, 1955. Thereafter the parties lived
together for three years but the marriage was not
consummated. The appellant filed an application before the
District Judge at Delhi on March 15, 1960 under s. 12 of the
Hindu Marriage Act, 1955, praying that the marriage between
himself and his wife, the respondent, being voidable may be
annulled by a decree of nullity. He averred that his wife
had an invincible and persistent repugnance to the act of
consummation and that she was impotent. The District Judge
and later the High Court concurrently found that neither
impotence nor invincible and persistent repugnance to the
sexual act were proved against the respondent. In further
appeal to this Court,
HELD : (i) Though it is not usual for this Court to
interfere on questions of fact, nevertheless, if the Courts
below ignore or misconstrue important pieces of evidence in
arriving at a finding, such finding is liable to be
interfered with by this Court. [563 B]
Earnest John White v. Kathleen Olive White, [1958] S.C.R.
1410, referred to.
However in the instant case the Courts below has neither
ignored nor mis-construed important pieces of evidence when
they came to the conclusion that the appellant’s case,
regarding the impotency of the respondent, could not be
believed. [563 C]
(ii)The case of G.v.G. L.R. (1924) A.C. 3491 could not help
the appellant in the face of the High Court’s finding that
’invincible repugnance to the sexual act’ on the part of the
respondent was not proved. [563 G-564 A]
(iii)The case of G.v.G. [L.R. (1912) P.D. 173 also,
could not help the appellant. In that case the Court
without going into the question which party was impotent was
satisfied that the couple could not consummate their
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marriage in the present or in the future and should not be
tied up together for their lives in misery. The position in
the present case was entirely different. Neither of the
Courts below had found that the marriage could not be
consummated in future and they had not also accepted the
appellant’s plea that the respondent had always resisted his
attempts to consummate the marriage. [564 B-564 E]
The appeal must accordingly be dismissed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 905 of 1968.
560
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated -
August 25, 1966 of the Punjab High Court (Circuit Bench)
Delhi in F.A.0. 132-D of 1961.
I. N. Shroff and Anand Prakash, for the appellant.
S. T. Desai I. M. Lal, S. R. Agarwal, Champat Rai and E.
C. Agarwal, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Vaidialingam, J. This appeal, by special leave, is directed
against the judgment dated August 25, 1966 of the Circuit
Bench -of the High Court of Punjab at New Delhi, confirming
the judgment of the District Judge, Delhi, dismissing the
petition filed by the appellant under s. 12 of the Hindu
Marriage Act, 1955 (Act XXV of 1955) (hereinafter called the
Act).
At the conclusion of the hearing of this appeal on April 28,
1969 we had indicated our conclusion that no interference
with the judgment of the High Court was called for and that
the appeal is dismissed without any order as to costs. The
detailed reasons for our decision were to be given later.
Accordingly we hereby give our reasons for coming to the
said conclusion.
The appellant had married the respondent according to Hindu
-rites on April 20, 1955. After the marriage the parties
lived together for about three years at various places such
as Delhi, Alwar, Bombay and Europe and, according to the
appellant, during this period the marriage was not
consummated. The appellant filed an application before the
District Judge at Delhi, on March 15, 1960 under s. 12 of
the Act praying that the marriage between himself and his
wife, the respondent, being voidable, may be annulled by a
decree of nullity. In brief, the case of the appellant was
that since his marriage he had made frequent attempts to
consummate it, but, due to an invincible and persistent
repugnance on the part of the respondent to the act of
consummation, he had failed to achieve it and, as such, the
marriage had remained unconsummated. He further averred
that his wife, the respondent, was impotent at the time of
the marriage and continued to be so until the filing of his
petition. According to him the impotency of the respondent
was responsible for the non,consummation of the marriage.
The respondent-wife contested the application on various
grounds. She emphatically denied that she had shown any
repugnance whatever to the act of consummation of marriage.
She further stated that she had lived with the appellant for
about three years and had also accompanied him on his visit
to England and
561
the Continent and, during that period she was always ready
and prepared to give full access to the, petitioner to her
person for consummating the marriage. She specifically
averred that the consummation could not take place because
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the appellant was suffering from some physical disability or
impotency and that he never made any attempt at
consummation. She repudiated the allegation that she was
either impotent at the time of the marriage of that she was
impotent at the time of institution of the proceedings. She
reiterated that the appellant was physically and emotionally
unable to consummate the marriage and he had made a false
excuse of impotency of the wife as being the cause for non-
consummation of the marriage. She further stated that the
appellant was physically and sexually impotent and,
consequently, unable to perform the normal sexual functions
and, in view of this, he had never expressed his
willingness, by his conduct or behaviour, to consummate the
marriage, even though the parties lived together for a
number of years and had occupied the same bed in the same
room.
It will therefore be seen that while the appellant filed the
application on the ground that the respondent was impotent,
the respondent, in turn, had alleged that it was the
appellant who was impotent. The material provision of the
Act under which the application was filed by the appellant
is s. 12(1) (a) which is as follows :
" 12(1) Any marriage solemnized, whether
before or after the commencement of this Act,
shall be voidable and may be annulled by a
decree of nullity on any of the following
grounds, namely
(a) that the respondent was impotent at the
time of the marriage and continued to be so
until the institution of the proceeding;
A party is impotent if his or her mental or physical
condition makes consummation of the marriage a practical
impossibility’. The condition must be one, according to the
statute, which existed at the time of the marriage and
continued to be so until the institution of the proceedings.
In order to entitle the appellant to obtain a decree of
nullity, as prayed for by him, he will have to establish
that his wife, the respondent, was impotent at the time of
the marriage and continued to be so until the institution of
the proceedings.
Both the appellant and the respondent have been examined by
doctors and their oral evidence and reports are on record.
562
Though the impotency of the appellant does not strictly
arise for consideration in a petition filed by him,
nevertheless the trial Court framed issues even in that
regard : Issues Nos. 1 and 2, which are material, are as
follows :
"1. Whether the respondent was impotent at the
time of the marriage and has continued to be
so till the filing of the present petition ?
2.Is the petitioner impotent and
consequently unable to perform the normal
sexual function with the respondent ? If so,
what is the effect thereof ?"
The learned District Judge, after a consideration of the
evidence on record, ultimately held that the appellant had
failed to prove that the respondent was at any time impotent
and, as such, decided issue No. 1 against the appellant. He
further held, on issue --No. 2 that the facts of the case,
on the contrary, showed that because of some physical or
psychological cause, it was the appellant who was not able
to consummate the marriage with the respondent. In this
view the petition filed by the husband-appellant was
dismissed.
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On appeal by the appellant, the learned Judges of the
Circuit Bench of the Punjab High Court differed from the
finding of the trial Court on issue No. 2. The learned
Judges, however, held that it had not been proved that the
appellant was impotent, but, on the material issue regarding
the impotency of the respondentwife, the learned Judge were
of the view that there were various factors and
circumstances throwing a serious doubt on the allegation
made by the appellant. The High Court held that it -had not
been established by the appellant that non-consummiation of
the marriage was due to the impotency of the respondent. It
further held that on the state of evidence it did not
believe that the respondent-wife had been proved to be
impotent. The High Court also declined to believe the case
of the appellant that the respondent had persisted in her
attitude of exhibiting repulsion to the sexual act.
It is not really necessary for us to deal elaborately with
the evidence in the case on the basis of which concurrent
findings have been recorded by the District Court and the
High Court, rejecting the case of the appellant that his
wife, the respondent, was impotent at the time of the
marriage and continued to be so until the institution of the
proceedings.
Mr. Shroff, learned counsel for the appellant, found
considerable difficulty in satisfying us that the finding
recorded by the two Courts on this aspect was erroneous or
not supported by the evidence. No doubt, there was a feeble
attempt made by the
563
learned counsel to urge that the evidence of the respondent
that she had always been ready and willing to allow her
husband to consummate the- marriage should not be believed.
When the two Courts have accepted her evidence, it is futile
on the part of the appellant to urge this contention.
The reliance placed by Mr. Shroff on the decision of this,
Court in Earnest John White v. Kathleen Olive White(’) is
misplaced. In that decision, it has been laid down that
though it is not usual for this Court to interfere on
questions of fact, nevertheless, if the Courts below ignore
or misconstrue important pieces of evidence in arriving at
their finding, such finding is liable to be interfered with
by this Court. We are satisfied that the Courts below, in
the instant case, have neither ignored nor misconstrued
important pieces of evidence when they came to -the
conclusion that the appellant’s case, regarding the
impotency of the respondent, could not be believed.
On the findings that both the appellant and the respondent
were not impotent and the marriage had not been admittedly
cosummated, counsel urged that the conclusion to be drawn
was that such consummation was not possible because of an
invincible repugnance on the part of the wife. Counsel
further urged that taking into account the practical
impossibility of consummation, the application filed by the
appellant should be allowed.
So far as the charge of ’invincible repugnance to the sexual
act’ on the part of the respondent is concerned, it is only
necessary to refer to the finding of the High Court that the
allegation had not been proved but that, on the other hand,
lack of proper approach by the appellant for consummating
the marriage might have been responsible for non-
consummation. It is the further view of the High Court that
the evidence of the appellant that he went on making
attempts on several occasions for consummation of the
marriage cannot be believed.
Mr. Shroff referred us to the decision of the House of
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Lords(2 )in G. v. G. That was an action by a husband against
his wife for a decree of nullity of marriage on the ground
of impotency. It was established that the husband was
potent and had made frequent attempts to consummate the
marriage; but he could not succeed owing to the unreasoning
resistance of the wife. The wife was declared, on medical
examination, not to suffer from any structural incapacity.
Under those circumstances the House of Lords held that the
conclusion to be drawn from the evidence was that the wife’s
refusal was due to an invincible repugnance to
(1) [1958] S.C.R. 1410.
(2) L.R. [1924] A.C. 349.
564
the act of consummation and, as such, the husband was
entitled to a decree of nullity. This decision does not
assist the appellant, as we have already referred to the
finding of the High Court disbelieving the evidence of the
appellant on this aspect.
Mr. Shroff next relied on the decision in G. v. G.(1)
holding that a Court would be justified in annulling a
marriage if it was found that the marriage had not been and
could not be consummated by the parties thereto, though no
reason for nonconsummation was manifest or apparent. In
that decision both the husband and the wife were perfectly
normal and each charged the other as being responsible for
non-consummation of the marriage. The Court held that
without going into the question as to who was the guilty
party, it was evident that the marriage had not been
consummated and could not be consummated in future also.
Accordingly the Court annulled the marriage for the reason
that it was satisfied that
" quoad hunc et quoad hunc, these people
cannot consummate the marriage."
The Court further held that the two people should not be
tied up together for the rest of their lives in a state of
misery. The position in the case before us is entirely
different. Neither of the two Courts have found that the
marriage cannot be consummated in future and they have not
also accepted the appellant’s plea that the respondent had
always resisted his attempts to consummate the marriage.
When once the finding has been arrived at that the appellant
has not established that the respondent was impotent at the
time of the marriage and continued to be so until the
institution of the proceeding, the inevitable result is the
dismissal of the appellant’s application under S. 12(1)(a)
of the Act. The result is that the appeal fails and is
dismissed. There will be no order as to costs.
G.C. Appeal dismissed.
(1) L.R. [1912] P.D. 173.
565